Technopreneurship and Educational Development Review (TENDER)
Vol 3 No 2 (2026): June 2026

VISIBILITY OF THE BANYUMAS DIALECT IN THE ACADEMIC ENVIRONMENT AS A MINORITIZED LANGUAGE: A LINGUISTIC LANDSCAPE STUDY

Yulian Purnama (Doctoral Language Education Study Program, Universitas Pendidikan Ganesha, Singaraja)
Linda Ayu Darmurtika (Doctoral Language Education Study Program, Universitas Pendidikan Ganesha, Singaraja)
I Made Sutama (Doctoral Language Education Study Program, Universitas Pendidikan Ganesha, Singaraja)
Putu Dewi Merlyna Yuda Pramesti (Doctoral Language Education Study Program, Universitas Pendidikan Ganesha, Singaraja)
Kadek Wirahyuni (Doctoral Language Education Study Program, Universitas Pendidikan Ganesha, Singaraja)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Jun 2026

Abstract

Research on minority languages in linguistic landscapes has predominantly focused on languages that are taxonomically distinct from the state language. However, Gorter, Cenoz, and Marten criticize this narrow approach and propose that the concept of "minority" should be expanded to include socially minoritized positions. This study applies this critique to the Banyumas dialect, a variety of Javanese that is sociolinguistically subordinate to the standard Surakarta-Yogyakarta dialect, particularly in educational settings. Using a quantitative survey documentation method, this study analyzes 100 signs in the academic environment of Banyumas Regency, covering 25 elementary schools, 25 junior high schools, 25 senior high schools, and 25 universities. The results show that the Banyumas dialect appears on 24 out of 100 signs (24%), with the highest visibility in senior high schools (36%) and the lowest in universities (12%). Based on six-level visibility continuum of Gorter, the Banyumas dialect in the academic environment is positioned at Level 4 to 5 (limited to neglected). The novelty of this research lies in its application of the minoritized language framework to a dialect—rather than a distinct language—in the Indonesian educational context. This study recommends the integration of the Banyumas dialect into the school curriculum and its strategic revitalization, with special attention to universities which have the lowest visibility.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

tender

Publisher

Subject

Education Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media Mathematics Social Sciences Other

Description

Technopreneurship and Educational Development Review (TENDER) is a peer-reviewed academic publication dedicated to exploring the intersection of technology entrepreneurship and educational advancements. The journal focuses on fostering innovative research, theories, and practices that contribute to ...